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[Ohio-Hamilton County]
From
A Woman's Life-Work: Labors and Experiences of . ty Qy
.¦r
C '
y y. ,
Laura S. Haviland. Asfj^' 1?>^ ^ "'U-'
f^^
[p.2i4] /^- y^
During vacation Mrs. Haviland attended an anti- slavery convention in Cincinnati, where she met a^jshlte slave man from Little Rock, Arkansas. He had left his home in the night and by morning, took public conveyance as any other white man would. On resLching .Cincinnati he found friends of the slave. [p.215] i^evj. Coffin advised him to go with Mrs. Haviland to Michigan. But as he was in haste he decided to go on at once, and she wrote him a letter of introduction to her friends, requesting them to furnish him with work. When she returned, thi^jwjji^ slave , Charles McClain^i, was at work^with_a„Xl*^leud. He was anxious to have his sister with him, who was as white as he was. Mrs. Haviland wrote to a color^ed minister at Little Rock about her. Mrs. Haviland imdertook the^Jp.216] mission, going by way of Cincinnati. There she took boat as far as Napoleon, and there took another to go up the Arkansas. ^^ River [p.219] She landed at. Litjble^Hock, and found ^($1 g^Jf
boarding place there. During her stay "Aunt Winnie" and her husband (two slaves) ran away, [p.226] and she was told
>, ,t*^-SWtW-<SW«ft*J>f.£i*«Wb--.-* -*:^^

[Ohio-Hamilton County]
From
A Woman's Life-Work: Labors and Experiences of . ty Qy
.¦r
C '
y y. ,
Laura S. Haviland. Asfj^' 1?>^ ^ "'U-'
f^^
[p.2i4] /^- y^
During vacation Mrs. Haviland attended an anti- slavery convention in Cincinnati, where she met a^jshlte slave man from Little Rock, Arkansas. He had left his home in the night and by morning, took public conveyance as any other white man would. On resLching .Cincinnati he found friends of the slave. [p.215] i^evj. Coffin advised him to go with Mrs. Haviland to Michigan. But as he was in haste he decided to go on at once, and she wrote him a letter of introduction to her friends, requesting them to furnish him with work. When she returned, thi^jwjji^ slave , Charles McClain^i, was at work^with_a„Xl*^leud. He was anxious to have his sister with him, who was as white as he was. Mrs. Haviland wrote to a color^ed minister at Little Rock about her. Mrs. Haviland imdertook the^Jp.216] mission, going by way of Cincinnati. There she took boat as far as Napoleon, and there took another to go up the Arkansas. ^^ River [p.219] She landed at. Litjble^Hock, and found ^($1 g^Jf
boarding place there. During her stay "Aunt Winnie" and her husband (two slaves) ran away, [p.226] and she was told
>, ,t*^-SWtW-f.£i*«Wb--.-* -*:^^